scholarly journals Emission Character Study on temperature Combustion Performance of Electronic Controlled Diesel Engine Mixed with Butanol

2019 ◽  
Vol 118 ◽  
pp. 02028
Author(s):  
Deng Hu ◽  
Zhaoxia Huang ◽  
Jialiang Huang ◽  
Tao Deng ◽  
Zi Xiao Ye ◽  
...  

In this paper, through the electromechanical control modification of 4190 ZLC-2 diesel, the electronic fuel injection model is established by AMESim simulation software, and the high pressure circulation model of butanol/diesel dual fuel engine is established by AVL-FIRE software, the appropriate initial parameters module and corresponding boundary conditions are set. At the condition of low-temperature combustion through exhaust gas recirculation (EGR), in the optimization scheme studying the influence of butan blending ratio and EGR rate on diesel engine emissions. The result shows that the addition of butanol can improve the low temperature combustion, reducing the formation of CO and soot. The introduction of EGR can achieve low temperature combustion and significantly reduce NO emissions. The optimal parameter set for parameter matching is obtained: B20/EGR12.5 %.

2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (8) ◽  
pp. 1426-1440 ◽  
Author(s):  
Buyu Wang ◽  
Michael Pamminger ◽  
Ryan Vojtech ◽  
Thomas Wallner

Gasoline compression ignition using a single gasoline-type fuel for direct/port injection has been shown as a method to achieve low-temperature combustion with low engine-out NOx and soot emissions and high indicated thermal efficiency. However, key technical barriers to achieving low-temperature combustion on multi-cylinder engines include the air handling system (limited amount of exhaust gas recirculation) as well as mechanical engine limitations (e.g. peak pressure rise rate). In light of these limitations, high-temperature combustion with reduced amounts of exhaust gas recirculation appears more practical. Furthermore, for high-temperature gasoline compression ignition, an effective aftertreatment system allows high thermal efficiency with low tailpipe-out emissions. In this work, experimental testing was conducted on a 12.4 L multi-cylinder heavy-duty diesel engine operating with high-temperature gasoline compression ignition combustion with port and direct injection. Engine testing was conducted at an engine speed of 1038 r/min and brake mean effective pressure of 1.4 MPa for three injection strategies, late pilot injection, early pilot injection, and port/direct fuel injection. The impact on engine performance and emissions with respect to varying the combustion phasing were quantified within this study. At the same combustion phasing, early pilot injection and port/direct fuel injection had an earlier start of combustion and higher maximum pressure rise rates than late pilot injection attributable to more premixed fuel from pilot or port injection; however, brake thermal efficiencies were higher with late pilot injection due to reduced heat transfer. Early pilot injection also exhibited the highest cylinder-to-cylinder variations due to differences in injector behavior as well as the spray/wall interactions affecting mixing and evaporation process. Overall, peak brake thermal efficiency of 46.1% and 46% for late pilot injection and port/direct fuel injection was achieved comparable to diesel baseline (45.9%), while early pilot injection showed the lowest brake thermal efficiency (45.3%).


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